Yayınlanmış 1 Ocak 2019 | Sürüm v1
Dergi makalesi Açık

Mobile genomic element diversity in world collection of safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) panel using iPBS-retrotransposon markers

  • 1. Abant Izzet Baysal Univ, Fac Agr & Nat Sci, Dept Field Crops, Bolu, Turkey
  • 2. Consiglio Ric Agr & Anal Econ Agr, Ctr Ric Cerealicoltura & Colture Ind, Bologna, Italy
  • 3. Cent Res Inst Field Crops, Ankara, Turkey
  • 4. Far Eastern Fed Univ, Educ Sci Ctr Nanotechnol, Vladivostok, Russia
  • 5. Quaid I Azam Univ, Dept Plant Sci, Islamabad, Pakistan
  • 6. South China Agr Univ, State Key Lab Conservat & Utilizat Subtrop Agrobi, Guangzhou, Guangdong, Peoples R China
  • 7. Ataturk Univ, Fac Agr, Dept Hort, Erzurum, Turkey
  • 8. Muhammad Nawaz Sharif Univ Agr, Dept Plant Breeding & Genet, Multan, Pakistan
  • 9. Chonnam Natl Univ, Dept Biotechnol, Chungnam, South Korea

Açıklama

Safflower (Carthamus tinctorius L.) is a multipurpose crop of dry land yielding very high quality of edible oil. Present study was aimed to investigate the genetic diversity and population structure of 131 safflower accessions originating from 28 different countries using 13 iPBS-retrotransposon markers. A total of 295 iPBS bands were observed among which 275 (93.22%) were found polymorphic. Mean Polymorphism information content (0.48) and diversity parameters including mean effective number of alleles (1.33), mean Shannon's information index (0.33), overall gene diversity (0.19), Fstatistic (0.21), and inbreeding coefficient (1.00) reflected the presence of sufficient amount of genetic diversity in the studied plant materials. Analysis of molecular variance (AMOVA) showed that more than 40% of genetic variation was derived from populations. Model-based structure, principal coordinate analysis (PCoA) and unweighted pair-group method with arithmetic means (UPGMA) algorithms clustered the 131 safflower accessions into four main populations A, B, C, D and an unclassified population, with no meaningful geographical origin. Most diverse accessions originated from Asian countries including Afghanistan, Pakistan, China, Turkey, and India. Four accessions, Turkey3, Afghanistan4, Afghanistan2, and Pakistan24 were found most genetically distant and might be recommended as a candidate parents for breeding purposes. The findings of this study are most probably supported by the seven similarity centers hypothesis of safflower. This is a first study to explore the genetic diversity and population structure in safflower accessions using the iPBS-retrotransposon markers. The information provided in this work will therefore be helpful for scientists interested in safflower breeding.

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